Episode 242 - Bay of Angels - a podcast by Mockingbird

from 2018-03-15T10:00

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I'm always surprised when proponents of One Way Love fail to apply it
in concrete cases. In other words, we can talk a good game -- abouthow Christ is always there, gets there first (!), when we are at our
lowest ebb, in our worst place of sin and paralysis -- how no sin, nosinner is ever beyond the reach of His "saving embrace" -- but when we
or someone close to us -- someone we really KNOW, in other words -- islying there bleeding to death from a self-inflicted wound, well,
then... I just don't know.What I am saying is that One Way Love is easy to talk about, but
rarely happens in concrete instances. I almost wince now when I hearor read bold expressions concerning One Way Love, because experience
has taught me that it's usually just words. And to tell the truth,the institutional church is, formally, almost never the dispenser of
grace to sinners -- except maybe some particular category of personsthat fits a current "narrative".
Jacques Demy's movies display wondrous examples of total conversion,last-minute conversion, sudden but decisive change of heart within
everyday people. "Bay of Angels" (1963), with Jeanne Moreau,concludes with the most dramatic of these sudden changes of heart. In
that connection, an artist like Demy shows Christians what theythemselves supposedly believe.
Ask yourself, is all this (wonderful) talk of "radical grace" -- andit really is radical, tho' no more radical than the entire focus of
the New Testament -- just words or do you mean it?The whole core of life, and the Gospel, is summed up in the once
famous expression "Love Means Never Having to Say You're Sorry". Itworks in Eric Segal's novel, it works in the 1969 movie, and it works
with your nearest and dearest. It's actually a whole new world("Aladdin", 1992).

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